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Senate Democrats stayed true to their threat by blocking a behemoth funding package, but in a surprising turn of events, they were joined by several Senate Republicans to derail the legislation.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and his caucus made it no secret that they would obstruct the government funding process over the last several days, demanding that Republicans strip the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding bill from the six-bill package. 

But the defection of seven GOP lawmakers – Sens. Ted Budd, R-N.C., Ron Johnson, R-Wis., Mike Lee, R- Utah, Ashley Moody, R-Fla., Rand Paul, R-Ky., Rick Scott, R-Fla., and Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala. – was an unexpected development on Thursday. 

Senate Democrats are willing to support the five other bills in the package, however, and have reiterated that bundle would easily pass if given the chance. 

‘Democrats are ready to avert a shutdown,’ said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee.

‘We have five bills we all agree on. About 95% of the remaining budget. It is ready to go,’ she continued. ‘We can pass those five bills, no problem. All Leader Thune has to do is tee them up for a vote.’

But Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., sought to call their bluff and barreled forward with the key test vote, which would have opened up several hours of debate and eventually a final vote to send the package to President Donald Trump’s desk.

Ahead of the vote, Thune said he hoped that conversations between the White House and Senate Democrats would produce the ‘the votes that are necessary to get it passed.’

Thune threw cold water on Senate Democrats’ several demands for reforms to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) making their way into the current package, too. 

‘That’s not going to happen in this bill, but there are, I mean, there’s a path to consider some of those things and negotiate that out between Republicans, Democrats, House, Senate, White House,’ Thune said. ‘But that’s not gonna happen in this bill.’ 

With the six-bill package, which included major funding bills for the Pentagon and other agencies, now scuttled, Senate Republicans and the White House are looking for a plan B to keep the government open or to at least minimize the damage from a partial shutdown. 

One option gaining momentum among Republicans would be to strip the DHS funding bill from the broader package, advance the smaller, five-bill bundle and then turn to a short-term funding extension, known as a continuing resolution (CR), for just Homeland Security. 

And there are ongoing negotiations among Senate Democrats and the White House on that particular idea. 

A White House official told Fox News Digital in a statement, ‘President Trump has been consistent — he wants the government to remain open, and the Administration has been working with both parties to ensure the American people don’t have to endure another shutdown.’ 

‘A shutdown would risk disaster response funding and more vital resources for the American people,’ the official said. 

But taking that route presents several hurdles and challenges, particularly with the House out until next week.

That’s because any modification to the current six-bill package would require the lower chamber to agree to it. The same is true for any CR that the Senate produces for DHS. 

Schumer pinned the possibility of a shutdown on Thune, arguing that if he just put the five-bill package on the floor, Senate Democrats would support it. 

‘Well, let me tell you first, if funding lapses, it’s all because of Leader Thune,’ Schumer said. ‘It’s on his back.’

House Republicans have already signaled their unwillingness to support a modified funding package, and turning to a CR is a simmering taboo that many Republicans in the lower chamber aren’t likely to be happy with.

But it’s an option that could be gaining steam with Schumer and the White House, despite Trump administration officials blaming the top Senate Democrat for canning a meeting among rank-and-file Senate Democrats and the administration on Wednesday. 

Turning to a CR would be an about-face for Senate Democrats, too. Last week they argued that a short-term extension for DHS would amount to a ‘slush fund’ for Trump and the administration to use in their immigration operations with no guardrails.

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A gold-standard guide used by judges nationwide to address subjects they are not particularly versed in is drawing criticism over the latest edition’s inclusion of purported ideological bias focused on its climate section.

Critics have said the fourth edition of the Federal Judicial Center’s Reference Manual on Scientific Evidence – which includes a foreword by Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan – appears to blur the line between neutrally educating judges and indoctrinating them with left-wing advocates’ prose.

The approximately 1,600-page guide was released at the beginning of the year and includes several citations and footnotes to climate change activists and proponents, including climatologist Michael Mann and environmental law expert Jessica Wentz.

Wentz is the topline expert at the Climate Judiciary Project at the Environmental Law Institute — an entity currently under federal investigation, as Fox News Digital recently reported.

‘The Committee on the Judiciary is investigating allegations of improper attempts by the Environmental Law Institute (ELI) and its Climate Judiciary Project (CJP) to influence federal judges,’ read a statement from House Judiciary Committee members Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, and Darrell Issa, R-Calif.

Jordan and Issa found evidence of efforts to ‘influence judges who potentially may be presiding over lawsuits related to alleged climate change claims… [which] appear to have the underlying goal of predisposing federal judges in favor of plaintiffs alleging injuries from the manufacturing, marketing, use, or sale of fossil-fuel products.’

Gavin Newsom pushes climate agenda in Brazil, downplays affordability concerns

A spokesperson for the institute told Fox News Digital at the time that CJP’s curriculum is ‘fact-based and science-first, grounded in consensus reports and developed with a robust peer review process’ and that suggestions otherwise are ‘without merit.’

Wentz, who is also a senior fellow at Columbia’s Sabin Center for Climate Law, is listed as chief author of the section, along with fellow university faculty Radley Horton, on page 1561.

She served as a witness for the plaintiffs in Juliana v. U.S., where youth activists accused the U.S. government of violating their constitutional rights by failing to implement their preferred climate change policies.

She also signed an amicus brief supporting the Obama administration’s environmental regulations after multiple states filed lawsuits against the EPA in 2016.  

Nonetheless, legal experts warned of the potential repercussions down the line of having such prominent contributors in what is supposed to be an apolitical anthology.

‘It is alarming to see how far the Left has gone in its blatant effort to capture the judiciary. Its feeding of trial lawyers’ climate ‘science’ to sitting judges who will decide contentious litigation in this area short-circuits our system of justice,’ said Carrie Severino, a former law clerk for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and president of the Judicial Crisis Network.

‘When they can’t pass their extreme policies into law, they are attempting to use the courts as an end run around the legislative process,’ said Severino, whose organization has helped vet judicial nominees, including Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett.

Michael Fragoso of Torridon Law, former chief counsel to Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., agreed that there is rank bias throughout the climate section of the anthology.

GOP senator hopes district judges don’t turn into ‘policy makers’ amid legal battle over Trump deportation flights

‘The whole section of the guide is shockingly inappropriate—and if you look at the organizational meeting at the National Academies, intentionally so,’ Fragoso said.

‘But when you dig into it, it only gets worse. The section on attribution ‘science,’ for example, was lifted in large part by a previous article written by the two authors and Michael Burger, who is himself a climate-plaintiff lawyer.’

‘Given that attribution is at the heart of these lawsuits, it’s shocking that the Judicial Center would let a plaintiff lawyer ‘explain’ it to judges. It’s even worse that it’s hidden in a random footnote,’ said Fragoso, who recently analyzed a key energy-related suit in Louisiana.

The House Judiciary Committee previously alleged CJP’s efforts appear to have the underlying goal of predisposing federal judges in favor of plaintiffs involved in climate litigation.

Mann, a climate change academic in Pennsylvania, authored a book called ‘The New Climate War,’ and the judges’ guide cites the book to claim the energy industry has sought to deceive the public.

He resigned from a role at the University of Pennsylvania in 2025 after disparaging social media comments about Charlie Kirk that invoked the Hitler Youth movement, and previously successfully sued conservative commentator Mark Steyn for $1 million over aggressive criticism of his famous ‘hockey stick graph’ that resulted from his study of human influence on global warming over the centuries.

When asked about criticisms of her role in crafting the guide, Wentz told Fox News Digital, ‘no comment.’ Mann did not respond to a request for comment.

Fox News Digital’s Elizabeth Elkind contributed to this report.

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House Republicans are rolling out a massive election overhaul package ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, including new voter ID requirements as well as limitations on how and when votes are cast.

The Committee on House Administration is unveiling new legislation on Thursday called the Make Elections Great Again (MEGA) Act, which would impose new federal standards on national elections across the U.S.

The sprawling bill includes key portions of the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, a measure that was led by Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, in the House. It comes as the Senate sees a renewed pressure campaign led by Elon Musk and others to take up that legislation.

‘Americans should be confident their elections are being run with integrity — including commonsense voter ID requirements, clean voter rolls, and citizenship verification,’ Committee on House Administration Chairman Bryan Steil, R-Wis., said in a statement.

He said the bill’s guardrails ‘will improve voter confidence, bolster election integrity, and make it easy to vote, but hard to cheat.’

Like the SAVE Act, the legislation would include mandatory proof of citizenship when a person registers to vote for the first time. 

Casting a ballot in federal elections would also require a photo ID. Progressive Democrats and groups like the League of Women Voters have argued that photo ID laws disenfranchise minority voters, while the Heritage Foundation pointed out that it’s shown to be popular across multiple public polls.

Steil’s elections bill would also ban ranked-choice voting in federal races, require states to use auditable paper ballots rather than electronic slips, and impose stronger requirements on voter list maintenance to ensure rolls are up to date.

New guardrails on mail-in ballots include a ban on universal mail-in ballots — meaning voters would have to specifically request one to receive it — while also requiring mail-in ballots to be received by Election Day to count and banning ‘ballot harvesting’ by third parties aiming to deliver them to poll centers.

The new legislation comes ahead of what’s expected to be a difficult midterm election season for Republicans.

Historical trends dictate that the first midterms after power changes hands in Washington normally see that party in power suffer losses, but GOP leaders are publicly optimistic that they can reverse that trend.

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House to ask whether it supports Steil’s bill but did not hear back by press time.

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Longtime Democratic consultant James Carville says Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker could potentially be his party’s best choice to lead Democrats to victory in the 2028 presidential election.

And Carville, who first gained national attention over three decades ago as the chief strategist for former President Bill Clinton’s 1992 White House victory, argues that former Vice President Kamala Harris doesn’t have a shot at winning the next Democratic presidential nomination.

The 2028 Democratic nomination battle in the race to succeed term-limited President Donald Trump is expected to draw a crowded and competitive field.

‘If I had to say one guy… I’d take JD Pritzker,’ Carville said this week in a sit-down interview with Fox News contributor Raymond Arroyo on his ‘Arroyo Grande’ podcast. Carville was asked which Democrat he could see carrying the flag into 2028.

The billionaire governor, a member of the Pritzker family that owns the Hyatt hotel chain and who has started several of his own venture capital and investment startups, is running this year for a third term to steer Illinois.

And Pritzker, who has become a leading voice in the Democrats’ opposition to Trump and has taken steps to Trump-proof his solidly blue state, has made a handful of trips in recent years to the key early voting states in the race for the White House.

Carville noted that Pritzker ‘campaigns hard.’

Asked about whether he could see Harris as the party’s standard-bearer in 2028, Carville responded, ‘She has no chance.’

Harris replaced then-President Joe Biden as the Democrats’ 2024 presidential nominee after Biden dropped his bid in July of that year, a month after a disastrous debate performance against Trump. Harris ended up losing the general election to Trump, who narrowly swept all seven key battleground states.

‘No Democrat wants anything to do with anybody that had anything to do with 2024,’ Carville emphasized, as he reasoned why Harris couldn’t win the 2028 nomination. He also questioned whether Harris, the nation’s first female and first Black vice president, had the ability to energize the Black community if she launched another White House run.

Carville said that the Democrats’ mantra heading into 2028 is ‘just win,’ and argued that ‘if we nominate two white males, nobody’s going to give a s—.’

He also doubted whether Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York would be a good 2028 nominee for the party.

Carville said the progressive champion and rising Democratic Party star ‘has talent, and she’s very smart.’

But he said that ‘the reason she is not going to work’ is because ‘there’s a large part of the Democratic Party that like to feel smug.’ Carville argued that Ocasio-Cortez and others on the progressive left of the party have alienated male voters.

‘Democratic culture became very feminized and very judgmental and that’s why we pushed so many of the males away,’ Carville said.

Asked by Fox News Digital if there’s anyone else he thinks is worth watching as a potential 2028 Democratic presidential contender, Carville mentioned former Louisiana Lt. Gov. and former New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu.

Landrieu mulled but ultimately decided against a 2020 White House and later served in the Biden administration.

Carville, pointing to ‘two huge mistakes that the Democratic Party made,’ also blamed former President Barack Obama and Biden for Trump’s 2016 and 2024 White House wins.

Obama continued and implemented the unprecedented $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, known as TARP, which was initiated by then-President George W. Bush at the very end of his White House tenure to stabilize the nation’s financial system after the 2008-2009 crisis.

The program prevented a total economic collapse, but was widely unpopular with voters.

‘The mistake they made was not going after these bankers,’ Carville said in the podcast, as he pointed to moves by Obama and his administration. ‘We bailed them out.’

And Carville emphasized that ‘there is one person who is responsible for the election of Donald Trump in 2024, and it’s not Donald Trump, it’s Joe Biden.’

Carville argued that if Biden ‘would have gotten out in September of 2023, it wouldn’t have been close.’

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A Muslim activist who served a prison sentence for his role in an overseas terror plot is now seeking elected office in Birmingham, Britain’s second-largest city, as local elections approach amid heightened communal tensions.

Shahid Butt was convicted by a Yemeni court in 1999 and sentenced to five years in prison after being found guilty of forming an armed gang and conspiring to bomb the British consulate in Aden, an Anglican church and a Swiss-owned hotel in Yemen. At the time, Yemeni prosecutors said the group had been sent to carry out violence by Abu Hamza, the extremist preacher who was the father of one of the convicted men.

He is now standing as a candidate for the newly formed Independent Candidates Alliance in the May 7 Birmingham City Council elections.

Butt maintains his innocence, claiming his confession was coerced through torture, and that evidence against him was planted, The Daily Telegraph reported.

He will contest the Sparkhill ward, an area where nearly two-thirds of residents are of Pakistani background, according to The Daily Telegraph.

Butt’s candidacy comes as Birmingham — home to one of the largest Muslim populations in the U.K. — has faced renewed strains over foreign policy, identity politics and public order. Those tensions came into sharp focus last November when Israeli soccer club Maccabi Tel Aviv played Aston Villa in a Europa Conference League match.

Ahead of the game, Butt used social media to call on Muslims from around the country to travel to Birmingham to show solidarity with Palestinians and to prevent the Israeli team’s supporters from, in his words, ‘desecrating’ and ‘dirtying’ the city. In one post, he referred to the visiting fans as ‘IDF babykillers,’ according to Birmingham Live.

Authorities ultimately barred Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters from attending the match, citing security concerns, after large-scale protests were planned.

In a video posted from a protest connected to the fixture, Butt made comments that critics say crossed from political speech into the endorsement of violence. ‘Muslims are not pacifists,’ Butt said in the video. ‘If somebody comes into your face, you knock his teeth out — that’s my message to the youth.’

Emma Schubart, a researcher at the Henry Jackson Society, said the developments reveal deeper fractures within British society. ‘Shahid Butt, a convicted terrorist, is standing for election in a ward that is around 80% Muslim. Maccabi Tel Aviv fans were banned from the second-largest city in the U.K. which is now nearly a third Muslim,’ Schubart said.

‘Politically,’ she added, ‘These events foreshadow a likely Muslim sectarian sweep in the local elections, since candidates like Butt are poised to erode Labour’s hold on seats throughout Birmingham.’

The Independent Candidates Alliance was founded by activists Akhmed Yakoob and Shakeel Afsar, both of whom ran unsuccessfully in Birmingham constituencies during the 2024 general election on a pro-Gaza platform. The group is expected to field candidates in around 20 wards across the city.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

  • Bill Belichick’s future is with UNC football. The NFL seems done with him.
  • Belichick’s tenure with Tar Heels off to rocky start, and no quick solutions apparent at quarterback.
  • Belichick eventually will earn Hall of Fame selection. Will he head to Canton with UNC buyout check in hand?

Amid the hysteria surrounding the snub heard ‘round the world, let’s remember Bill Belichick will get another crack at the Hall of Fame. This will iron out, and Belichick eventually will gain enshrinement in Canton.

In the meantime, Belichick can cast his sights on another Hall of Fame. The one in Atlanta. That’s the College Football Hall of Fame.

You might be thinking, “Isn’t Belichick 73 years old? How’s he going to build a College Hall of Fame resume?”

Age is just a number, folks. Curt Cignetti’s number is 64, and he’s college football’s new overlord.

Anyway, what else does Belichick have to occupy his time but college football? How many queen pageants can one man stomach?

It’s not like he’s a threat to head back to the NFL. The Shield is finished with him. If we needed convincing Belichick’s NFL days are but a memory, we got evidence this offseason.

Several NFL jobs opened. None of those organizations hired Belichick.

North Carolina football is Bill Belichick’s present and future

Beli belongs to the college game now and into the future. His march toward college enshrinement began with a 4-8 season for Chapel Bill.

OK, so that’s a rough start, right? Well, no worse than Belichick’s 6-10 debut with the Cleveland Browns in 1991.

Consider 2025 a launch point — both for Jordon Hudson’s career as a Svengali, and for Belichick’s pursuit of induction into the hallowed halls in Atlanta.

Michigan would consider deflating a few footballs child’s play.

And if you want to steal somebody’s quarterback, no problem. Just make sure to stage the plunder with a wad of cash in hand.

As for Belichick’s dating choices, well, he’s never wrecked a motorcycle with a staff member who doubled as a mistress along for the ride.

Belichick dating a 24-year-old seems quite trivial when you consider Michigan’s former coach faces a felony charge and allegations that he terrorized his ex-mistress, and Ohio fired its coach while citing his romantic relationship with a student.

Belichick is but a saint in this hotbed of sin we call college football.

He even dipped off to Nantucket for a hand-holding adventure with his girlfriend, while in the heat of college football season. How’s that for a good boyfriend?

Now, Belichick just needs to win some games, because we tolerate a lot in college football, but there’s no stomach for losing.

Belichick’s UNC rebuild must include a quarterback

We’ve seen just how easily Belichick can ignite. All he needs is 20 seasons with one quarterback named Brady, plus a few spy cams, and he can turn an otherwise unremarkable coaching career into GOAT status.

Now, if only he could find another quarterback like the chin-dimpled glory boy.

That shouldn’t be hard, right? It’s not as if he must develop a quarterback. Buy one from the transfer market. That’s the beauty of the college game.

Only, Belichick isn’t having much luck practicing the plundering arts. His first attempt at a transfer quarterback went splat. Gio Lopez, fresh from South Alabama, withered at UNC. The Tar Heels’ latest round of portal shopping includes a pair of unheralded former backup quarterbacks.

C’mon, Beli. This isn’t that hard. Find a rich booster. Smile, shake his hand, have a meal with him, award him a spot on your speed dial, and get access to his checkbook. Then, make a purchase.

Belichick, perhaps wanting to show he’s not an NFL flight risk, seems intent on playing the long game. Entering the second year of a five-year deal at UNC, his staff has asked for patience as Belichick hatches his plan.  

You can’t rush greatness. Well, Curt Cignetti can, but Cig didn’t have to worry about protecting GOAT status, did he?

Belichick is taking the scenic route to success. While UNC’s peers fueled up on proven transfers, Belichick signed a modestly rated portal haul.

Instead of buying plug-and-play problem solvers, Belichick signed 38 high school prospects. The majority were three-star recruits.

What better way for Belichick to prove he can develop talent?

It’s only a matter time before it crystalizes that Belichick is charting a course for enshrinement in Atlanta.

Or, maybe not. Better chance he’ll one day head to Canton, with a UNC buyout check in hand.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s senior national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Speed skater Jordan Stolz has dominated the sport since the 2022 Beijing Olympics.
  • Stolz could potentially win four gold medals at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina.
  • His success is attributed to a combination of strong technique and a heavy weight training program.
  • Stolz holds the world record in the 1,000 meters and has swept the sprint distances at recent world championships.

MILWAUKEE — Jordan Stolz was too quiet.

He’d taken an iPad to his room, and it was well past the time when he should have come back out with it. Stolz and older sister Hannah weren’t allowed on screens much and, when they were, it was for a limited amount of time.

Stolz’s father, Dirk, figured his son was playing games or watching videos. Instead, when he entered Stolz’s room, he found his son staring intently at the screen, rewinding something over and over.

It was a clip of Russian speed skater Pavel Kulizhnikov, who’d just set the world record in the 500 meters.

“He said, ‘I’m trying to figure out how to get the world record,’” Dirk Stolz recalled to USA TODAY Sports.

Stolz was not yet 12.

A decade later, Stolz not only has a world record — he broke Kulizhnikov’s previous mark in the 1,000 meters in 2024 — he has an almost unbreakable hold on men’s speedskating.

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He has won every 1,000 and 1,500-meter race this World Cup season, and five of the nine 500-meter races. This after he swept the sprint distances at the world championships in 2023 and 2024, and won the season title at all three distances last season.

After putting the mass start back on his international schedule for the first time since junior worlds in 2023, Stolz finished on the podium in two of the first four World Cups, including a win in Hamar, Norway, in December.

Stay healthy, and Stolz could leave the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina with four gold medals, etching himself into Olympic history. Only Eric Heiden has won more medals at a single Winter Games, famously winning five as he swept the speedskating events at the 1980 Games in Lake Placid.

Norwegian biathlon great Ole Einar Bjørndalen (2002) and Soviet speed skater Lidiya Skoblikova (1964) are the only athletes to win four golds at a single Winter Olympics.

“Sometimes you just sit back and realize what level you’re actually on and it’s kind of amazing,” Stolz told USA TODAY Sports. “I don’t want to say too much about it, because you want to try and keep realistic. So I just focus on what’s ahead.

“But if you look at all the stuff that has been done, it’s kind of large.”

Jordan Stolz’s Olympic journey began on backyard pond

Stolz grew up in Kewaskum, Wisconsin, a northwest exurb of Milwaukee. He and Hannah were captivated watching Apolo Anton Ohno at the Vancouver Olympics in 2010, and begged their parents to let them try speedskating.

There’s a pond on the family’s property, so Dirk Stolz cleared off a 30-yard straightaway.

“It was fun for them to go crashing into the snowbank,” Dirk Stolz said.

That straightaway soon became a full oval, and Dirk Stolz added lights so the kids could keep skating after it got dark.

“They were down there all the time,” he said.

When it was clear this wasn’t a passing fad, Jane and Dirk Stolz looked for a speedskating club for their children. Which isn’t hard to find in Wisconsin, long the epicenter for the sport in the U.S.

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Heiden, Bonnie Blair, Dan Jansen, Shani Davis — all either grew up in Wisconsin and/or trained at what is now the Pettit National Ice Center in West Allis, 10 minutes west of downtown Milwaukee.

It was at the Pettit that Stolz and his sister caught the eye of Bob Fenn, Davis’ coach.

“Bobby comes up to me and Jane and was like, ‘I want to coach your kids. Your kids have such a work ethic. They’re such go-getters,’” Dirk Stolz said.

Given their kids’ enthusiasm for the sport, the Stolzes decided to go all-in. The kids began home schooling so they could train. Jane and Dirk Stolz alternated their work schedules, Jane on the day shift, Dirk on the night shift, so there would always be someone available to make the 45-minute drive to the Pettit Center. They turned competitions into mini-vacations, staying at hotels with water parks.

Though Hannah Stolz stopped speedskating as a teenager, Stolz became even more committed.

“The technique aspect and constantly being able to improve and go faster,” Stolz said of why he loves the sport. “The feeling of hitting a turn at 40 miles per hour, you can’t get that feeling doing anything else.”

After Fenn died unexpectedly in 2017, Davis coached Stolz for about a year. But when Davis left to train China’s speedskaters, the then-14-year-old called Bob Corby, who had once coached Jansen and Blair.

Corby, a physical therapist, had treated Stolz for a pulled hip flexor two years earlier.

“He said, ‘I don’t have a coach. Would you please coach me?’” Corby said.

New coach, new regimen changes career trajectory

Stolz has always had great technique, as well as an ability to instantaneously make corrections. He is obsessive about getting better. When Jane Stolz would record her son’s races on her phone, he’d immediately grab it afterward to search for where he could save a millisecond or two.

Until he started training with Corby, however, Stolz had done minimal offseason training. Biking mostly. (He was only 14, after all.) So Corby developed a strength training program for Stolz, one that emphasizes heavy weight training.

“When I was coaching in the early ‘80s, we could skate technically better than everyone in the world, but we couldn’t beat them,” Corby said. “It occurred to me, we weren’t strong enough.”

The stronger a speed skater is in the thighs and glutes, the more power they can generate and the faster they will go. Heiden was famous for his lower-body strength, running or skate-walking with a sandbag on his shoulders to build up his leg muscles.

The exact amount Stolz lifts in the offseason is something of a trade secret, but suffice to say even Olympic weightlifters would be impressed. Pair that with pristine technique, and you have a speed machine.

“I’ve never seen anybody generate speed like he does,” Corby said. “He’s got extremely strong legs. Then, when you add really, really good technique that puts power into the ice, it’s a really good combination.”

Though COVID wiped out what would have been their first competitive season together, it gave Stolz more time to get stronger.

“That’s when he really took off,” Corby said.

At the U.S. championships in January 2021, Stolz won the 500 meters. He was 16. He made his first Olympic team the next year, finishing 13th in the 500 meters and 14th in the 1,000 at the Beijing Games.

But the experience was invaluable. The 17-year-old was on his own at those Games, with neither Corby nor his family able to go because of the strict COVID protocols. He didn’t really know how to manage jet lag, and didn’t bring any of his own food with him.

“This time around, I think I’m a bit more experienced,” Stolz said. “I’ve gotten stronger. My technique has gotten better. I feel like everything overall has improved, and it’s shown in the times.”

Indeed, speedskating hasn’t been the same since.

Just how dominant has Stolz been since Beijing Olympics?

Nine months after the 2022 Olympics, Stolz became the youngest man to capture an individual World Cup race, winning both the 1,000- and 1,500-meter races. A month later, he made the podium in three races — the 500, 1,000 and 1,500 meters — at the same World Cup for the first time.

He won the three sprint distances at the 2023 junior world championships, then did the same thing a month later at the senior worlds. It made him the youngest world champion, and first man to win three golds at a single world championships.

Stolz duplicated that feat the following year and then won the World Allround Speed Skating Championships, a prestigious event that tests skaters at the short, middle and long distances. At 19, he was the youngest skater to win it since Heiden, who was 17 when he won the first of three consecutive titles.

“I remember watching Heiden,” Dirk Stolz said, a note of awe in his voice. “This kid is getting compared to one of the greatest Olympic athletes? How did this happen?”

Why these Olympics could be transformational

Those kind of comparisons, and the expectations they bring, could send any athlete sideways. So, too, the glare of the spotlight. Stolz is featured heavily in NBC’s promotions for the Olympics — he’s alongside Hollywood heartthrob Glen Powell in one ad — and is showing up in commercials for big-name brands like Honda, Omega and Ralph Lauren.

If he does win multiple golds in Milano Cortina, it could catapult him to a level of superstardom that transcends sports, that rarefied air that Michael Phelps and Simone Biles occupy.

Stolz is not daunted by this. He is extremely confident without being cocky, recognizing that hard work, not luck, is what got him here, and continued hard work is what will be required for continued success.

“I just try and keep realistic,” Stolz said. “We know what we’re doing that’s working to make me faster. So I think if we continue to do that, it’ll continue to progress.

“I try not to get too far ahead of it or think like, ‘Oh, I’m going to skate this time next year.’ I just kind of try and see where it ends up,” Stolz added. “I know if I get stronger in the summer, good chances are you’re going to be faster in the winter.”

It helps that Stolz has gotten a taste of the limelight that awaits when he’s traveled to the Netherlands, where speedskating is a national obsession. It helps even more that, in addition to his family and Corby, his support group includes Davis, a two-time Olympic champion whose career was marked as much by missteps as medals.

The two remain close, with Davis describing Stolz as a little brother, and Davis does not hesitate to shoot Stolz straight in a way no one else can. He will never give Stolz better than a six out of 10 after a race, knowing it will encourage the younger skater to stay hungry. He counsels Stolz to be careful with what he says and does, knowing all too well that the court of public opinion does not give do-overs.

“I didn’t have an adviser that knew the information that I needed, and I was always kind of learning things the hardest way possible,” Davis said. “I wish I had had somebody like that, but it makes me want to advise and help just for that very reason alone.

“Hindsight’s 20-20, but if I could have done things a little bit better, maybe I would’ve had slightly better results,” said Davis, who won a gold and a silver at both the 2006 and 2010 Olympics.

“I’m just happy to be in the position I’m in, to give back from what I’ve experienced and what I worked for,” Davis added. “I can see him picking up where I left off and even pushing the bar further.”

That is what’s most astounding. Or, if you’re Stolz’s competitors, most terrifying.

At 21, Stolz’s career is just beginning. Even if he’d win four golds in Milano Cortina, he can, and almost certainly will, get better.

“You kind of get addicted to improving the times and trying to go faster,” Stolz said. “It’s something you have to learn or grow into, but I really like it.”

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

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Iowa Republican Sen. Joni Ernst is introducing legislation Thursday targeting fraud in federal programs — a proposal that would set early-warning tripwires to flag suspected scams and push agencies to claw back taxpayer dollars, Fox News Digital has learned.

‘It’s absolutely unacceptable that the fraud running rampant in Minnesota could end up costing taxpayers more than $9 billion,’ Ernst told Fox News Digital. ‘My Putting an N to Learing about Fraud Act will ensure this never happens again by putting more safeguards in place to detect scams early and require the recovery of any money ripped off from taxpayers.’

Ernst’s office said the bill is designed to hit fraud on two fronts: tightening rules around childcare payments and creating new spike alerts in healthcare programs to flag suspicious surges early, while also pushing the federal government to recover improper payments.

If passed, the bill would force state plans tied to federal childcare dollars to pay providers based on documented attendance — not just enrollment — to prevent taxpayer money from going out for care that never happened.

It also underlines that states can reimburse providers after services are delivered rather than paying upfront. Providers taking federal funds would have to track attendance and keep those records for seven years, making them available for audits by the Department of Health and Human Services, the attorney general and the comptroller general.

On the healthcare front, the legislation would create new notification requirements tied to abrupt jumps in health billings and costs. States would be required to notify Health and Human Services when the amount being paid for a service increases by more than 100% in a year, or if the number of providers seeking payment increases by 100% in a year. 

Beyond early detection, the bill aims to force agencies to claw back funds either swindled from taxpayers or received in error.

It would direct the Office of Management and Budget to issue guidance to federal agencies to ensure improper payments are recovered and require inspectors general to report annually the amount of improper payments recovered by each agency.

The legislation follows the sweeping fraud scandal that continues to plague Minnesota. Dozens of arrests have been made, most of whom are from the state’s large Somali population, as investigators uncover hundreds of millions of dollars in alleged fraud swindled from taxpayers through welfare and social services programs. 

Federal prosecutors have said the fraud could total $9 billion. 

‘The swindlers in Minnesota and everywhere else soon are going to ‘lear’ the hard way that in the era of DOGE, crime no longer pays,’ Ernst added in a comment to Fox News Digital, referring to the viral ‘Quality Learing Center.’ 

The misspelled Quality ‘Learing’ Center daycare sign became a focal point of the fraud scandal after YouTube journalist Nick Shirley dug into alleged fraud in Minnesota. 

Fox News Digital learned that Ernst will also name Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as the January recipient of her office’s ‘Squeal Award’ for ‘failing to stop the runaway fraud in his own backyard.’ Ernst awards various lawmakers and government fraud scandals themselves the Squeal Award each month to spotlight ‘out of control waste.’

The governor dropped out of his re-election effort earlier in January amid the fallout of the fraud scandal. Walz, who has served as governor since 2019, took ownership of the fraud as it occurred under his watch, but argued multibillion-dollar figures were ‘sensationalized’ by Republicans. 

‘Whoever is in charge. Unlike the president, I’m governor now (and) whether these programs happen before we got here or afterwards, it doesn’t matter. We’re here now. We’re the ones fixing it. You have my guarantee on this, that I certainly will have this thing fixed,’ Walz said earlier in January. 

Fox News Digital reached out to his office on Thursday morning for additional comment. 

Ernst has long positioned herself as a leading Senate watchdog on waste and fraud, working with both Congress and the Trump administration to flag questionable spending. 

She launched and leads the Senate Department of Government Efficiency caucus as President Donald Trump readied to reclaim the Oval Office, which works to snuff out government spending, reduce bureaucracy and enforce transparency, producing more than $15.1 billion in real savings.

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: The electric grid kept the lights on for much of the country hit by the weekend’s massive snowstorm chiefly because the Trump administration broke from Biden-era plans, keeping five major coal-fired power plants online and allowing grid providers to draw in more fossil fuel-based energy in vulnerable areas.

The Energy Department made the claims in exclusive comments to Fox News Digital, as officials said multiple megawatts of power were made additionally available from otherwise taboo hydrocarbons.

Secretary Chris Wright issued several emergency orders over the weekend and through Tuesday that permitted power plants to operate beyond levels set by EPA regulations and considered the ceiling prior to President Donald Trump’s second term, a source familiar with the situation told Fox News Digital.

Five such plants were on track to be closed under the Biden-era push to pivot from fossil fuels to green energy, the official said, adding that the Trump administration was prepared to give energy producers leeway to push more power online to reduce risks of blackouts. The Trump administration saved 17 gigawatts of coal power that were going to be forcibly shut down as well, Fox News has learned.

‘We told grid providers: if your energy demand reaches a critical level… let us know,’ the official said, adding that there is a direct correlation between the power being saved up and what was needed to keep the lights on as states from Alabama to Vermont were hammered with wintry weather and deep freezes.

As the storm approached, Wright informed grid operators to be prepared to use more than 35 gigawatts of unused backup generation nationwide, sourced from anywhere from data centers to big-box stores, bypassing prior environmental regulations by emergency order.

That gave a wide buffer against blackouts and hundreds of millions in emergency costs for Americans — as 1 gigawatt is enough to power Wright’s hometown Denver metro area alone.

‘How power sources perform during peak electricity demand reveal their true value,’ Energy Department press secretary Ben Dietderich told Fox News Digital.

‘Across the country, wind and solar generation plummeted while natural gas, coal and oil plants did the majority of the work keeping the lights on during the storm. According to DOE data, the Biden administration’s support for forcibly closing reliable coal and natural gas plants had America on track to see blackouts increase 100 times over by 2030.’

‘Thankfully, President Trump was elected and has already prevented the forced closure of five coal plants and more than 17 gigawatts of reliable coal power,’ Dietderich added.

Dietderich said the Trump administration and Wright continue to be committed to ‘unleashing’ affordable and reliable energy that works — ‘whether the wind is blowing or the sun is shining,’ a common administration reference to the unreliability of those forms of green energy when those natural power sources aren’t present.

As the storm approached, Wright remarked that the Trump administration ‘will not stand by and allow the previous administration’s reckless energy subtraction policies and bureaucratic red tape put American lives at risk.’

The structure of the department’s emergency preparations is also meant to save American lives, he said.

Energy secretary details how government shutdown impacts US nuclear stockpile

In that regard, wind and solar power only accounted for 10% of the energy utilized across the storm’s path.

Hydrocarbons and coal, by contrast, provided 68% of the power in those same areas, a power source often maligned on the left.

The department noted that in New England — where renewable and green energy sources are often put on the proverbial pedestal — nearly two-thirds of the energy utilized was sourced from hydrocarbon-based or coal-fired power.

American coal power itself provided enough electricity for 30 million homes across the storm’s path, the department said.

Fox News Digital reached out to President Biden’s representatives for comment.

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  • Bill Belichick was not selected for the Pro Football Hall of Fame on the first ballot despite winning six Super Bowls as New England Patriots head coach.
  • At least 11 of the 50 voters on the selection committee did not vote for Belichick, who needed 80% of the vote.
  • The decision has been called an embarrassment that damages the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s legitimacy.

What an embarrassment.

Like so many others, I’m stunned that Bill Belichick was not selected on the first ballot for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. If winning six Super Bowls as New England Patriots coach – more than any coach in history – doesn’t ensure induction, then nothing will.

I’m embarrassed, too, because the selection committee that I’ve been honored and privileged to be a part of for 29 years, really missed the mark.

Yes, for the record, I voted for Belichick as the lone finalist for the coaching category. I supported Mike Holmgren in that category last year and think that still-overlooked Mike Shananan and Tom Coughlin deserve the glory of busts in Canton, too.

And please don’t tell me that Belichick having Tom Brady – who vouches for the impact the coach had on his development as the most prolific winner during the Super Bowl era – diminishes his case.

Yet somehow, at least 11 voters from our 50-member panel did not vote for Belichick, leaving him short of the 80% needed (at least 40 votes) for selection.

So, what happened?

Belichick went from no-brainer selection to first-ballot pariah

Of course, during our marathon, eight-hour selection meeting on Zoom recently we thoroughly discussed Belichick’s record and the controversies of Spygate and Deflategate. Of all the candidates, which included 15 modern-day player finalists, a contributor (Patriots owner Robert Kraft) and three seniors nominees (Ken Anderson, Roger Craig and L.C. Greenwood), the discussion of Belichick was one of the longest.

Hey, I was in the room when Joe Montana was up for the Class of 2000 – at that time, the meetings were held in person, the day before the Super Bowl – and the scribe presenting Super Joe, Ira Miller of the San Francisco Chronicle, stood up and used one sentence to make his case, something to the effect of: “I present Joe Montana.”

Then Ira sat down.

In other words, it was a no-brainer.

Sure, Belichick’s case is a lot more complex than Montana’s was, given the discipline that’s on his record for secretly filming the hand signals used on the New York Jets sideline in 2007 – he was fined $500,000, largest ever for an NFL coach, and the Patriots were docked $250,000 in addition to the loss of a first-round draft pick – yet even with that blemish it seemed that Belichick was a no-brainer, too, as a first-ballot pick for the Hall.

Or so I thought.

In the ESPN report on Jan. 27 that revealed the Belichick snub – nine days before the Hall officially reveals it Class of 2026 during the “NFL Honors” show – Hall of Fame general manager Bill Polian was characterized as an influential force who wanted Belichick to wait a year as penance for Spygate.

That certainly wasn’t expressed by Polian during our Zoom call. And Polian vehemently denied the allegation, from an anonymous voter, according to ESPN.com, that he led a charge to keep Belichick out in sidebar conversations with voters.

“That’s unequivocally false,” Polian told USA TODAY Sports.

Sure, you can suspect that Polian had motivation. During his years as the Indianapolis Colts GM from 1998 to 2011, the rivalry with the Patriots was intense. Many point to Polian, then a member of the NFL’s competition committee, for the crackdown on enforcing illegal contact penalties, given how star Patriots cornerback Ty Law bullied Colts receiver Marvin Harrison. And Deflategate, remember, was ignited by the under-inflated footballs that Brady used in the 2015 AFC championship game against the Colts. Hmmm.

Now consider this: Even if Polian – a big supporter of Kraft – didn’t support Belichick’s case, it still took at least 10 other voters from the panel to deny entry. Given the relatively new rules that pit the finalist from the coaching category against the contributor finalist and three seniors category finalists, this is deeper than merely casting Polian as the archvillain.

“I was shocked that he didn’t get in,” Polian told me. “He deserves to be in the Hall, without question. He’s imminently qualified. I’m sorry he didn’t get in. I look forward to voting for him next year.”

Regardless, some serious damage has been done here. Keeping Belichick out – at least for now – takes some shine off those who will be ultimately presented as the Hall’s newest class. Even worse, as the most significant snub in my years in this mix, it has left a stain on the Hall of Fame that unnecessarily fuels questions about its legitimacy.

I mean, Bill Cowher, Tony Dungy and Don Coryell are in the Hall of Fame and Belichick is not? That’s not a knock on the other coaches, elected under a different set of voting rules. But Belichick’s 333 victories, second only to Don Shula’s 347, counts for a whole lot.

Hall of Fame coach Jimmy Johnson: ‘It tarnishes everybody’

“It tarnishes everybody associated with the Hall of Fame,” Jimmy Johnson, who won two Super Bowls with the Dallas Cowboys and was inducted into the Hall in 2021, told USA TODAY Sports. “They can’t kick me out. But he deserves to be in before me.”

Johnson was so hot about it when we talked Jan. 28. Granted, they are tight. Belichick has made several treks to the Florida Keys to hang and fish with Johnson, typically wanting to talk shop while Johnson wants him to unplug.

When they saw each other recently at the college national championship game, Johnson told Belichick that he would see him in Canton at the induction ceremony in August – and he made arrangements for a chartered plane to get there.

“Well, I canceled that plane,” Johnson said.

Johnson maintains that Belichick’s achievements are more impressive than other coaching legends because they came in an era of the salary cap and free agency. And that’s not counting the two Super Bowl rings he won as defensive coordinator with the New York Giants.

“No one knows the history and loves the NFL more than Bill Belichick,” Johnson added. “That’s why I’m so upset.”

You’re ticked off about Belichick? So are those of us who voted for him

Johnson has so much company in the ticked-off department. Shoot, I’m a bit ticked – a bit – that so many want to lump the entire selection committee as one monolithic body.

No, that’s not how it works. The voters – largely made up of journalists – have the free will to make their independent selections. While the Hall’s bylaws stipulate that we are to only consider what occurs on the field, there’s some gray area with interpretation.

It’s possible, too, that some voters didn’t support Belichick as a matter of conscience, given the cheating scandal represented with Spygate.

I’m also thinking that the voting requirement for the special categories – we are required to vote for three of the five candidates from the coach, contributor and seniors categories – threw a wrench into the equation for Belichick. There are voters who are passionate about seniors nominees, thinking they get short shrift after not becoming Hall of Famers after 20 years of eligibility as modern-day candidates.

Sure, some seniors candidates may have slipped through the cracks. But to stack the deck with three seniors candidates each year is a recipe that makes it much tougher on deserving coaches and contributors.

Count me in the crowd that favors transparency with the voting. If there’s a reason to vote for one candidate over another, let the explanations flow.

In the meantime, there’s no shortage of feedback from the internet mob. Intense. Vile. Below the belt. Passionate. All of that.

Yet it’s also ironic that despite his reputation for being anything but Mr. Congeniality, Belichick has proven to be quite a unifier on social media. There’s overwhelming noise contending that we got it so wrong.

To that point, I can hardly disagree.

 Contact Jarrett Bell at jbell@usatoday.com or follow on X: @JarrettBell

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